A practice of honest self-inquiry during public mourning, distinguishing genuine grief from performative sadness and exploring what our emotional responses reveal about our values.
The examined heart—Mirabai's core teaching—becomes crucial during collective grief, when social pressure to mourn 'correctly' is intense. This practice asks: Am I grieving authentically or performing grief? What does my sorrow reveal about my attachments and beliefs? When a public figure dies, collective mourning can become theater; the examined heart brings awareness to one's actual emotional landscape. This isn't coldness but precision. Mirabai's devotional intensity came from ruthless honesty about her own heart's movements. Applied to collective grief, examination permits us to separate genuine mourning for loss from anxiety about social judgment, from identification with tragedy that isn't ours, from the pull to perform emotion we don't feel. Communities that practice examined mourning together develop integrity; grief becomes a mirror showing us what we truly value and how we're actually related to shared loss.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.